maryland medicaid’s partnership in improving behavioral health services susan tucker executive...
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Maryland Medicaid’s Partnership in Improving
Behavioral Health Services
Susan TuckerExecutive Director, Office of Health Services
May 14, 2014
Maryland Medicaid• Began in 1966• By FY 14, we provided full Medicaid
benefits for over 1.2 million Marylanders
• Cost about $8.5 billion in FY13 in State and federal funds
• In FY 13 consumed about 24% of State budget (compared to 22% nationwide)
Maryland Medicaid
• Within federal parameters, Maryland designs its own:• Eligibility standards• Benefits package• Provider requirements• Payment rates
• Program administration through a State Plan or through waivers approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
Health Reform• Medicaid expansion
– ACA provides that all adults at or below 138% FPL will be eligible for Medicaid beginning in 2014 (this includes the prior PAC population).
– 100% federally-funded 2014-2016; tapers down to 90% federally-funded by 2020
– All new adults are being enrolled in Managed Care Organizations.
5 of 15Source: DHMH, Office of Health Care Financing
Jul-06 Jul-07 Jul-08 Jul-09 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-12 Jul-13 Jul-14 -
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
Enrollment in Maryland Medicaid, by Coverage Category, 2006-2014
Other
Parents/Caretakers
ChildrenMCHP
Disabled
PAC
Medicaid ACA Ex-
pansion44,859 459,819
Elderly
Pregnant Women
Managed Care in
Maryland Medicaid
Maryland Medicaid Managed Care History
• Voluntary HMO program in the 1970s• Mandatory enrollment in HealthChoice MCOs
began in 1997• Over one million Marylanders - 83% of individuals
on Medicaid are enrolled in an MCO• Managed care is a way of financing and delivering
health care aimed at improving quality and controlling cost
8 of 15
HealthChoice• In managed care, Medicaid pays for some
or all services at a prepaid rate – “capitation payment”
• Medicaid contracts with managed care organizations (MCOs), which contract with a network of providers
• MCOs must meet a variety of quality and other standards, such as network adequacy
Managed Care Plans 5/10/14*
MCO MembershipAmerigroup 282,209JAI Medical Systems 27,600Maryland Physician’s Care 198,388MedStar Family Choice 62,684Priority Partners 246,657Riverside (New in 2013) 21,864United HealthCare 236,231* Kaiser to begin on June 2014
Managed Care Challenges• States are trying to create more incentives
for better quality of care• Moving toward pay for performance
• Providing integrated care despite carve outs• Pharmacy (specialty mental health and
HIV/AIDs)• Mental health (SUD in Calendar Year 2015)• Dental (DentaQuest is our dental ASO)• LTC services
Behavioral Health InitiativesMedicaid, MHA, ADAA Working
Together
Medicaid & Behavioral Health Administration Partnerships
• Development of 1915(i) SPA for Children with severe emotional disturbance (SED); also Tiered Targeted Case Management (TCM) Program for Children (both planned for October 1, 2014)
• Health Homes for Individuals in psychiatric rehabilitation programs (PRPs) or opioid treatment programs (OTPs) (program implemented on October 1, 2013)
• Maryland in process of procuring a new administrative service organization (ASO) to administer behavioral health benefit for Medicaid
1915(i) Community Options for Children, Youth, & Families
• Wraparound services for children with serious emotional disturbance at <150% FPL– Replaces RTC demonstration waiver– Offers community-based services option for families
• Joint workgroup with Mental Hygiene Administration– Regulations and SPA submitted
• Ongoing efforts– Implementation planning: systems, billing, reporting– Provider outreach & enrollment– Launch October 1, 2014
Mental Health Case Management: Care Coordination for Children and Youth
• Three levels of care coordination for children and youth with serious emotional disturbance– Formerly part of adult TCM program– Levels ensure continuity of care for
children with varying levels of SED• Joint workgroup with MHA
– Regulations and SPA submitted– Launch October 1, 2014
Health Homes
• Current Status– Implemented: October 1, 2013
– State Plan Amendment: CMS approved in October 2013 after months of consultation
– Regulations: Effective October 1, 2013
– eMedicaid: Health Home tool developed by Medicaid, used by providers
Target Population for Health Homes
• Serious Mental Illness & Substance Use Disorders
• Complexity of needs, providers & access
• Increased risk for chronic conditions
• Poor health outcomes
• Lower life expectancy 16
Health Home
• Funding is 90% Federal - 10% State for health home services for 8 quarters from October 2013 to 2015 – then 50% match
• Psychiatric Rehabilitation Programs (PRP), Mobile Treatment Programs (MTP), and Opioid Treatment Programs (OTP) are able to establish health homes
Health Home• Federally Mandated Core Services
• Comprehensive care management• Care coordination• Health promotion• Comprehensive transitional care• Client and family support• Referral to community and social
services
Health Homes– Add nurses and physician/nurse
practitioner consultants to PRP, MTP, and OTP teams to:• Further the integration of behavioral and
somatic care through improved care coordination
• Improve participant outcomes and experience of care
• Decrease health care costs among individuals with chronic conditions
Health Homes• There are currently 61 approved
Health Home sites throughout 19 counties in Maryland. Nearly 3,500 participants have been enrolled in the Health Homes program. With 18 approved sites as of April 30, Baltimore City has the most participating Health Homes.
61 Approved
47 Psychiatric Rehabilitation Programs
10 Mobile Treatment Providers4 Opiod Treatment Programs
2 Pending
11 Denied
73 Applications
Received
3,136 Adult Participants
282 Youth Participants
3,418 Total Participants
RFP for Behavioral Health• Worked with stakeholders to develop
requirements for Integrated Behavioral Health ASO
• Goal was to take a good system and make it better by integrating and coordinating mental health and substance use services
• Challenge is to build in care coordination for physical health care
Good and Modern System• We have a good behavioral health
system but we can all strive for improvements in patient care and outcomes
• The challenge is to move to a system that includes better integration of care and coordination for mental health, substance use and physical health care without losing the current strengths of the PMHS
What should Medicaid leadership be doing going forward?
• Maintain strong and open relationship with stakeholders
• Build on a collaborative, productive partnership with BHA
• Work toward a system that provides high quality, cost effective, and coordinated care for individuals with Medicaid
• Encourage coordination between behavioral health and somatic providers – more attention to risk factors for individuals with chronic behavioral health problems like smoking, obesity, and hypertension
• Expand access to coordinated care through health homes, telemedicine, comprehensive and interoperable electronic health records and other technological advances
Questions?